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George Alexander Macfarren

Sir George Alexander Macfarren (2 March 1813 – 31 October 1887) was an English composer and musicologist.

George Alexander Macfarren

Life edit

 
Walter Macfarren, his brother

George Alexander Macfarren was born in London on 2 March 1813 to George Macfarren, a dancing-master, dramatic author and journalist,[1] who later became the editor of the Musical World,[2] and Elizabeth Macfarren, née Jackson.[3] At the age of seven, Macfarren was sent to Dr Nicholas's school in Ealing, where his father was dancing-master; the school numbered among its alumni John Henry Newman and Thomas Henry Huxley.[4] His health was poor, however, and his eyesight weak,[4] so much so that he was given a large-type edition of the Bible and had to use a powerful magnifying-glass for all other reading.[5] He was withdrawn from the school in 1823 to undergo a course of eye treatment.[3] The treatment was unsuccessful, and his eyesight progressively worsened until he became totally blind in 1860.[6]

However, his blindness had little effect on his productivity. He overcame the difficulties posed by his lack of sight by employing an amanuensis in composition.[7] One amanuensis was composer Oliveria Prescott.[8]

On 27 September 1844, Macfarren married Clarina Thalia Andrae,[3] subsequently known as Natalia Macfarren (1827–1916), an operatic contralto and pianist who was born in Lübeck. Trained at the Royal Academy of Music, she was successively a concert singer and singing teacher, as well as being a writer and a prolific translator of German poetry, songs (lieder) and operatic libretti into English.[9] Her singing translation for the finale text of Beethoven's Symphony No. 9, the "Ode to Joy", became its most popular translation in England.[10] She also composed for piano.[3] Their daughter, Clarina Thalia Macfarren (23 March 1848 – 10 July 1934), married Francis William Davenport, one of George Macfarren's students.

His brother Walter Macfarren (28 August 1826 – 1905) was a pianist, composer and professor of the Royal Academy.[11] Emma Maria Macfarren, the wife of another brother, John, was also a pianist and composer.[12]

 
Macfarren's house in Hamilton Terrace, St John's Wood
 
Plaque on the house

Macfarren was knighted in 1883.[3] He lived with "chronic bronchitis and a weak heart" but refused to abate his working schedule,[13] and died on 31 October 1887, at his house in Hamilton Terrace, St John's Wood.[3] He is buried in Hampstead Cemetery.[14]

Musical career edit

Macfarren began to study music when he was fourteen, under Charles Lucas.[15] In 1829, at the age of sixteen, he entered the Royal Academy of Music, where he studied composition under Cipriani Potter[6] as well as piano under William Henry Holmes and trombone with John Smithies.[3] His ability to perform, however, was hindered by his poor eyesight and he soon concentrated upon composing only.[16] In his first year at the academy, Macfarren composed his first work, the Symphony in F minor.[17]

From 1834 to 1836 Macfarren taught at the academy without a professorship; he was appointed a professor in 1837.[18] He resigned in 1847 when his espousal of Alfred Day's new theory of harmony became a source of dispute between him and the rest of the academy's faculty.[18] In 1845, he became conductor at Covent Garden, producing the Antigone with Mendelssohn's music; his opera on Don Quixote was produced under Bunn at Drury Lane in 1846.[7] Macfarren's eyesight had at that point deteriorated so significantly that he spent the next 18 months in New York to receive treatment from a leading oculist, but to no effect.[3] He was re-appointed a professor at the academy in 1851, not because the faculty had any greater love for Day's theories, but because they decided that free thought should be encouraged.[19] He succeeded Sir William Sterndale Bennett as principal of the academy in 1876.[18] He was also appointed professor of music at Cambridge University in 1875,[20] again succeeding Bennett.[18]

Macfarren founded the Handel Society,[3] which attempted to produce a collected edition of the works of George Frideric Handel (between 1843 and 1858). Among his theoretical works was an analysis of Beethoven's Missa solemnis (described as Beethoven's "Grand Service in D", and published in 1854);[21] and a textbook on counterpoint (1881).

His overture "Chevy Chace" was performed on 26 October 1843 by the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra conducted by Felix Mendelssohn.[22]

Mendelssohn had heard it performed in London and wrote to the composer that he "liked it very much". After the Leipzig concert Mendelssohn wrote again to say "Your overture went very well, and was most cordially and unanimously received by the public, the orchestra playing it with true delight and enthusiasm".[23]

Richard Wagner also admired the peculiar and wildly passionate character of the piece (which he described as the "Steeple Chase by MacFarrinc" in his diary). Wagner also described the overture's composer as "a pompous, melancholy Scotsman".[24]

The "Chevy Chace" overture and two of his symphonies have been recorded.[25]

Among Macfarren's operas were King Charles II, produced at the Princess's Theatre in 1849 (Natalia Macfarren made her operatic debut in this production),[3] and an adaptation of Robin Hood produced in 1860.[26] A recording by Victorian Opera was recorded in 2011.[27] A recording of the two act chamber opera The Soldier's Legacy of 1864, scored for four soloists, piano and harmonium, was issued in 2023.[28]

His oratorios brought him some popular and critical success. The most enduringly successful of these, St John the Baptist, was first performed in 1873 at the Bristol Festival. The Resurrection premiered in 1876, Joseph in 1877 and King David in 1883.[18]

Macfarren also wrote chamber music, most notably the six string quartets that span over 40 years from 1834.[29] Other chamber works include a piano trio in E minor, a piano quintet in G minor, sonatas for flute and violin, and three piano sonatas.[30] Macfarren also composed for the concertina. His composition Romance and Allegro agitato for concertina, violin, viola, cello, and double bass was first performed by Richard Blagrove in 1854.[31] Other compositions for concertina include the Barcarole (1856) and Violetta – A Romance (1859), both for concertina and piano.[32] Macfarren also wrote an arrangement for the concertina and seven other instruments, of the second movement from Mendelssohn’s Italian symphony.[33]

Compositions (selective list) edit

Orchestral edit

  • 1828 – Symphony No. 1 in C (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, September 1830)
  • 1831 – Symphony No. 2 in D minor (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, December 1831)
  • 1832 – Symphony No. 3 in E minor
  • 1832 – Overture in E-flat (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, 26 June 1833)
  • 1833 – Symphony No. 4 in F minor (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, 27 October 1834)
  • 1833 – Symphony No. 5 in A minor
  • 1834 – The Merchant of Venice, overture (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, October 1835)
  • 1835 – Piano Concerto in C minor (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, 2 November 1835)
  • 1835 – Concerto for Two Pianos in C major (jointly as a student with William Sterndale Bennett)
  • 1836 – Symphony No. 6 in B-flat
  • 1836 – Romeo and Juliet, overture
  • 1836 – Concertino in A, for cello and orchestra
  • 1836 – Chevy Chace, overture (fp. Society of British Musicians, London, 7 January 1838)
  • 1839–40 – Symphony No. 7 in C-sharp minor (fp. Philharmonic Society, London, 9 June 1845)
  • 1842 – Don Carlos, overture
  • 1845 – Symphony No. 8 in D
  • 1856 – Hamlet, overture (fp. New Philharmonic Society, London, 23 April 1856)
  • 1863 – Flute Concerto in G (fp. Hanover Square Rooms, London, 24 February 1864)
  • 1873 – Violin Concerto in G minor (fp. Philharmonic Society, London, 12 May 1873)
  • 1874 – Symphony No. 9 in E minor (fp. British Orchestral Society, London, 26 March 1874)
  • 1874 – Festival Overture (fp. Liverpool Festival, 1874)
  • 1875 – Idyll in Memory of Sterndale Bennett (fp. Philharmonic Society, London, 5 July 1875)

Choral and vocal edit

  • 1853 – Lenora, cantata (fp. Exeter Hall, London, 25 April 1853)
  • 1856 – May Day, cantata (fp. Bradford Festival, 28 August 1856)
  • 1860 – Christmas, cantata (fp. Musical Society of London, 9 May 1860)
  • 1867 - Two Songs with clarinet obbligato: 'A Widow Bird' (Shelley), 'Pack Clouds Away' (T. Heywood)[34]
  • 1868 – Songs in a Cornfield, cantata (fp. London, 1868)
  • 1872 – Outward Bound, cantata (fp. Norwich Festival, 1872)
  • 1873 – St John the Baptist, oratorio (fp. Bristol Festival, 23 October 1873)
  • 1876 – The Resurrection, oratorio (fp. Birmingham Festival, 30 August 1876)
  • 1876 – The Lady of the Lake, cantata (fp. Glasgow Choral Union, 15 November 1877)
  • 1877 – Joseph, oratorio (fp. Leeds Festival, 21 September 1877)
  • 1883 – King David, oratorio (fp. Leeds Festival, 12 October 1883)
  • 1884 – St George's Te Deum (fp. Crystal Palace, London, 23 April 1884)
  • 1887 – Around the Hearth, cantata (fp. Royal Academy of Music, London, 1887)

Operatic edit

  • 1831 – Mrs G, farce (fp. Queen's Theatre, London, 1831)
  • 1832 – Genevieve; or,The Maid of Switzerland, operetta (fp. Queen's Theatre, London, 1832)
  • 1833 – The Prince of Modena, opera [unperformed]
  • 1834 – Caractacus, opera [unperformed]
  • 1835 – Old Oak Tree, farce (fp. Lyceum Theatre, London)
  • 1835 – I and My Double, farce (fp. Lyceum Theatre, London, 16 June 1835)
  • 1836 – If the Cap Fit Ye, Wear It, farce
  • 1836 – Innocent Sins; or, Peccadilloes, operetta (fp. Coburg Theatre, London, August 1836)
  • 1837–38 – El Malhechor, opera [unperformed]
  • 1838 – The Devil's Opera, opera (fp. Lyceum Theatre, London, 13 August 1838)
  • 1839 – Love Among the Roses, romance
  • 1839 – Agnes Bernauer, the Maid of Augsburg, romance (fp. Covent Garden Theatre, London, 20 April 1839)
  • 1840 – An Emblematic Tribute on the Queen's Marriage, masque (fp. Drury Lane Theatre, London, 10 February 1840)
  • 1840–41 – An Adventure of Don Quixote, opera (fp. Drury Lane Theatre, London, 3 February 1846)
  • 1847–48 – King Charles II, opera (fp. Princess's Theatre, London, 27 October 1849)
  • c.1850 – Allan of Aberfeldy, opera [unperformed]
  • 1850 – The Sleeper Awakened, serenata (fp. Her Majesty's Theatre, London, 15 November 1850)
  • 1860 – Robin Hood [simple], opera (fp. Her Majesty's Theatre, London, 11 October 1860)
  • 1863 – Freya's Gift, allegorical masque (fp. Covent Garden Theatre, London, 10 March 1863)
  • 1863 – Jessie Lea, opera di camera (fp. Gallery of Illustration, London, 2 November 1863)
  • 1863–64 – She Stoops to Conquer, opera (fp. Covent Garden Theatre, London, 11 February 1864)
  • 1864 – The Soldier's Legacy, opera di camera (fp. Gallery of Illustration, London, 10 July 1864)
  • 1864 – Helvellyn, opera (fp. Covent Garden Theatre, London, 3 November 1864)
  • 1880 – Kenilworth, opera [unperformed]

Chamber music edit

  • 1834 – String Quartet No 1 in G minor
  • 1840 – String Quartet No 2 in F major, Op. 54 (published Leipzig, 1846) [35]
  • 1842 – String Quartet No 3 in A major
  • 1843-4 – Piano Quintet in G minor
  • 1852 – String Quartet in G minor
  • 1857 – Violin Sonata in E minor
  • 1864 – Fantasia: Traditions of Shakespeare, variations for clarinet and piano[34]
  • 1872 – Religious March in E-flat major[36]
  • 1878 – String Quartet in G major
  • 1880 – Piano Trio in A minor for flute, cello and piano
  • 1883 – Flute Sonata

Piano edit

  • 1842 – Piano Sonata No 1 in E-flat major (revised 1887)
  • 1845 – Piano Sonata No 2 in A Ma cousine
  • 1880 – Piano Sonata No 3 in G

Incidental music edit

  • 1882 – Ajax (fp. Cambridge University, November 1882)

Reputation edit

During his lifetime, Macfarren's music met with a mixed reception; "his views were often considered dogmatic and reactionary, but, unlike Grove, his theoretical and analytical expertise was indisputable.".[37] One contemporary called Macfarren "essentially a musical grammarian, engaged all his life long in settling the doctrine of the enclitic de."[38] Those who thought highly of his work praised its originality and its tastefulness. According to a contemporary commentator, Macfarren "had great originality of thought and, as a composer, would probably have had still greater success if his early composition studies had been formed on the more modern lines to which he afterwards became so devotedly attached."[39] Salome's dance in St John the Baptist was praised for its avoidance of the salacious: "The whole of the scene is very cleverly worked out, and the composer has avoided anything inappropriate in the music descriptive of the dance, that might be considered out of place in an oratorio."[39] Others, however, criticized the oratorio, arguing that "with all its very great and solid merit, can be said to be original in style only in virtue of the logical results of certain theories of harmony held by its composer."[40] By the early twentieth century, Macfarren's works were no longer performed, a fact which the Worshipful Company of Musicians attributed to a lack of genius on Macfarren's part: "Never was more earnest composer, more prolific writer; never did man strive more zealously for the art of his country; yet Heaven had endowed him only with talent and not genius."[41]

Modern commentators generally consider Macfarren to be "the most eminent representative" of conservatism in orchestration.[42] His Ajax has been called "professionally composed if uninspiring"[43] and his writing for trumpet singled out as "conventional ... although he does make liberal use of the out-of-tune harmonics, especially b [flat]', he rarely uses notes outside the harmonic series and rarely writes the first trumpet part above the first treble staff."[44] Macfarren's music is "capable of graceful lyricism, [but] what may be a desire to avoid cliches in the songs leads him at times to an unexpected angularity of line that seems more awkward than fresh.[45] However, Macfarren's St John the Baptist has been praised as "an original and imaginative piece in which the shadow of Mendelssohn, so prominent since the appearance of Elijah in 1846, is only occasionally perceptible."[18]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Banister (1891), p. 2.
  2. ^ The Musical Times, Vol. 39 (1 January 1898) New York and London
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Brown (2004).
  4. ^ a b Banister (1891), p. 10.
  5. ^ Banister (1891), p. 13.
  6. ^ a b Smither (2000), p. 339.
  7. ^ a b Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Macfarren, Sir George Alexander" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  8. ^ Smither (2000), p. 350.
  9. ^ Degott (2007), pp. 225–226.
  10. ^ Solie (2004), p. 39.
  11. ^ Ellsworth (2007), p. 150.
  12. ^ Scholes (1970), p. 310.
  13. ^ Macfarren, Walter (1905), p. 207.
  14. ^ Foreman (2005), 117.
  15. ^ Banister (1887–1888), p. 69.
  16. ^ Banister (1891), p. 31.
  17. ^ Caswell (1938), p. 66.
  18. ^ a b c d e f Smither (2000), p. 340.
  19. ^ Banister (1887–1888), 70.
  20. ^ "Macfarren, George Alexander (MFRN875GA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
  21. ^ "Permalink for Beethoven score and analysis at New York Public Library". Archived from the original on 6 July 2013. Retrieved 10 January 2007.
  22. ^ Larry Todd, R. (23 October 2003). Mendelssohn. Oxford University Press, USA. ISBN 9780195110432.
  23. ^ Banister (1891), p. 41.
  24. ^ Wagner, Richard, My Life, Volume 2, p. 630.
  25. ^ his fourth and seventh, by the Queensland Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Werner Andreas Albert. It is possible that the fourth symphony is the F minor symphony that was played in 1834 by the Society of British Musicians.Banister, Henry Charles (6 February 1888). "The Life and Work of Sir G. A. MacFarren". Proceedings of the Musical Association. 1887–1888. Oxford University Press: 67–88. JSTOR 765395.
  26. ^ Temperley, Nicholas. "Macfarren, Sir George (Alexander)", Grove Music Online (subscription req'd)
  27. ^ Robin Hood. Naxos CD 8.660306-07 (2011)
  28. ^ The Soldier's Legacy, Retrospect Opera RO009, reviewed at MusicWeb International
  29. ^ Unsung Composers
  30. ^ Brown (2004)
  31. ^ "Mr.Richard Blagrove's Annual Concert". The Musical World. 32 (22): 376. 3 June 1854.
  32. ^ Atlas, Allan W. (1996). The Wheatstone English concertina in Victorian England. Oxford: Clarendon Press. pp. 23, 41. ISBN 978-0198165804.
  33. ^ "The Concertina". Belfast Telegraph. 27 June 1877. p. 4.
  34. ^ a b Recorded by Colin Bradbury and Oliver Davies on The Victorian Clarinet Tradition, Clarinet Classics CC0022 (1997)
  35. ^ IMSLP: complete set of parts and realisation by Steve's Bedroom Band
  36. ^ "Review: The Organist's Quarterly Journal by Wm. Spark". The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular. 15 (352): 508. 1 June 1872.
  37. ^ Dale (2003), 62.
  38. ^ Hadow (1894), 29.
  39. ^ a b Barnett (1906), 179.
  40. ^ Statham (1875), 300.
  41. ^ Worshipful Company of Musicians (1906), 283.
  42. ^ Brownlow (1996), 140.
  43. ^ Dibble (2002), 136.
  44. ^ Brownlow (1996), 105.
  45. ^ Smither (2000), 353.

References edit

  • Banister, Henry Charles. George Alexander Macfarren: His Life, Works, and Influence. London: G. Bell and Sons, 1891. OCLC 1720974.
  • —. "The Life and Work of Sir G. A. Macfarren." Proceedings of the Musical Association 7th session (1880–1881): 67–88.
  • Barnett, John Francis. Musical Reminiscences and Impressions. London: Hodder and Staughton, 1906.
  • Brown, Clive. "Macfarren, Sir George Alexander (1813–1887)." Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004. Accessed 17 May 2009.
  • Brownlow, James Arthur. The last trumpet: a history of the English slide trumpet. New York: Pendragon Press, 1996. ISBN 0-945193-81-5.
  • Caswell, Mina Holway. Ministry of Music: The Life of William Rogers Chapman. 1938. Reprint. Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2006. ISBN 1-4286-6089-5.
  • Dale, Catherine. Music Analysis in Britain in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries. Aldershot, Hants., England: Ashgate, 2003. ISBN 1-84014-273-1.
  • Degott, Pierre (2007). Dow, Gillian E (ed.). Translators, Interpreters, Mediators: Women Writers 1700–1900. Bern, Switzerland: Peter Lang. pp. 225–236. ISBN 978-3-03911-055-1.
  • Dibble, Jeremy. Charles Villiers Stanford: man and musician. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-19-816383-5.
  • Ellsworth, Therese (2007). Ellsworth, Therese; Wollenberg, Susan (eds.). The Piano in Nineteenth-Century British Culture: Instruments, Performers and Repertoire. Aldershot, Hampshire: Ashgate. ISBN 978-0-7546-6143-6.
  • Foreman, Susan. London: A musical gazetteer. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2005. ISBN 0-300-10402-2.
  • Hadow, W. H. Studies in Modern Music: Frederick Chopin, Antonín Dvořák, Johannes Brahms. 1894. Reprint. Montana: Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0-7661-8263-0.
  • Legge, Robin Humphrey (1893). "Macfarren, George Alexander" . In Lee, Sidney (ed.). Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 35. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
  • Macfarren, Walter Cecil. Memories: An autobiography. The Walter Scott Publishing Company, Ltd., 1905.
  • "Macfarren's 'Chevy Chase' Overture". The Musical Times, 1 August 1911 page 527.
  • Poston, Lawrence (Spring 2005). "Henry Wood: the "Proms," and National Identity in Music, 1895–1904". Victorian Studies. 47 (3): 397–426. doi:10.1353/vic.2005.0104. S2CID 144254258.
  • Miller, George (July–August 1999). "Macfarren Symphonies: No. 4; No. 7 * Werner Andreas Albert, cond; Queensland PO * cpo 999 433 (58:40)". Fanfare. 22 (6).
  • Scholes, Percy Alfred (1970). The Mirror of Music, 1844–1944: A Century of Musical Life in Britain as Reflected in the Pages of the Musical Times. Freeport, New York: Books for Libraries Press. ISBN 0-8369-5443-2.
  • Shrock, Dennis. Choral Repertoire. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2009. ISBN 0-19-532778-0.
  • Smither, Howard E. A History of the Oratorio: The oratorio in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2000. ISBN 0-8078-2511-5.
  • Solie, Ruth A. (2004). Music in Other Words: Victorian Conversations. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23845-1.
  • Statham, H. Heathcote (March 1875). "The Place of Sterndale Bennett in Music". Fraser's Magazine: 299–305.
  • Temperley, Nicholas. Music in Britain: The Romantic Age, 1800-1914. The Athlone History of Music in Britain, Vol. 5. London: The Athlone Press, 1981.
  • Weber, William (Winter 2008). "Canonicity and Collegiality: "Other" Composers, 1790–1850". Common Knowledge. 14 (1): 105–123. doi:10.1215/0961754X-2007-034. S2CID 143131494.
  • Worshipful Company of Musicians. English music 1604 to 1904: being the lectures given at the Music Loan Exhibition of the Worshipful Company of Musicians, held at Fishmongers' Hall, London Bridge, June–July, 1904. The Walter Scott Publishing Company, Ltd., 1906.

External links edit

george, alexander, macfarren, march, 1813, october, 1887, english, composer, musicologist, contents, life, musical, career, compositions, selective, list, orchestral, choral, vocal, operatic, chamber, music, piano, incidental, music, reputation, notes, referen. Sir George Alexander Macfarren 2 March 1813 31 October 1887 was an English composer and musicologist George Alexander Macfarren Contents 1 Life 1 1 Musical career 2 Compositions selective list 2 1 Orchestral 2 2 Choral and vocal 2 3 Operatic 2 4 Chamber music 2 5 Piano 2 6 Incidental music 3 Reputation 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksLife edit nbsp Walter Macfarren his brother George Alexander Macfarren was born in London on 2 March 1813 to George Macfarren a dancing master dramatic author and journalist 1 who later became the editor of the Musical World 2 and Elizabeth Macfarren nee Jackson 3 At the age of seven Macfarren was sent to Dr Nicholas s school in Ealing where his father was dancing master the school numbered among its alumni John Henry Newman and Thomas Henry Huxley 4 His health was poor however and his eyesight weak 4 so much so that he was given a large type edition of the Bible and had to use a powerful magnifying glass for all other reading 5 He was withdrawn from the school in 1823 to undergo a course of eye treatment 3 The treatment was unsuccessful and his eyesight progressively worsened until he became totally blind in 1860 6 However his blindness had little effect on his productivity He overcame the difficulties posed by his lack of sight by employing an amanuensis in composition 7 One amanuensis was composer Oliveria Prescott 8 On 27 September 1844 Macfarren married Clarina Thalia Andrae 3 subsequently known as Natalia Macfarren 1827 1916 an operatic contralto and pianist who was born in Lubeck Trained at the Royal Academy of Music she was successively a concert singer and singing teacher as well as being a writer and a prolific translator of German poetry songs lieder and operatic libretti into English 9 Her singing translation for the finale text of Beethoven s Symphony No 9 the Ode to Joy became its most popular translation in England 10 She also composed for piano 3 Their daughter Clarina Thalia Macfarren 23 March 1848 10 July 1934 married Francis William Davenport one of George Macfarren s students His brother Walter Macfarren 28 August 1826 1905 was a pianist composer and professor of the Royal Academy 11 Emma Maria Macfarren the wife of another brother John was also a pianist and composer 12 nbsp Macfarren s house in Hamilton Terrace St John s Wood nbsp Plaque on the house Macfarren was knighted in 1883 3 He lived with chronic bronchitis and a weak heart but refused to abate his working schedule 13 and died on 31 October 1887 at his house in Hamilton Terrace St John s Wood 3 He is buried in Hampstead Cemetery 14 Musical career edit Macfarren began to study music when he was fourteen under Charles Lucas 15 In 1829 at the age of sixteen he entered the Royal Academy of Music where he studied composition under Cipriani Potter 6 as well as piano under William Henry Holmes and trombone with John Smithies 3 His ability to perform however was hindered by his poor eyesight and he soon concentrated upon composing only 16 In his first year at the academy Macfarren composed his first work the Symphony in F minor 17 From 1834 to 1836 Macfarren taught at the academy without a professorship he was appointed a professor in 1837 18 He resigned in 1847 when his espousal of Alfred Day s new theory of harmony became a source of dispute between him and the rest of the academy s faculty 18 In 1845 he became conductor at Covent Garden producing the Antigone with Mendelssohn s music his opera on Don Quixote was produced under Bunn at Drury Lane in 1846 7 Macfarren s eyesight had at that point deteriorated so significantly that he spent the next 18 months in New York to receive treatment from a leading oculist but to no effect 3 He was re appointed a professor at the academy in 1851 not because the faculty had any greater love for Day s theories but because they decided that free thought should be encouraged 19 He succeeded Sir William Sterndale Bennett as principal of the academy in 1876 18 He was also appointed professor of music at Cambridge University in 1875 20 again succeeding Bennett 18 Macfarren founded the Handel Society 3 which attempted to produce a collected edition of the works of George Frideric Handel between 1843 and 1858 Among his theoretical works was an analysis of Beethoven s Missa solemnis described as Beethoven s Grand Service in D and published in 1854 21 and a textbook on counterpoint 1881 His overture Chevy Chace was performed on 26 October 1843 by the Leipzig Gewandhaus Orchestra conducted by Felix Mendelssohn 22 Mendelssohn had heard it performed in London and wrote to the composer that he liked it very much After the Leipzig concert Mendelssohn wrote again to say Your overture went very well and was most cordially and unanimously received by the public the orchestra playing it with true delight and enthusiasm 23 Richard Wagner also admired the peculiar and wildly passionate character of the piece which he described as the Steeple Chase by MacFarrinc in his diary Wagner also described the overture s composer as a pompous melancholy Scotsman 24 The Chevy Chace overture and two of his symphonies have been recorded 25 Among Macfarren s operas were King Charles II produced at the Princess s Theatre in 1849 Natalia Macfarren made her operatic debut in this production 3 and an adaptation of Robin Hood produced in 1860 26 A recording by Victorian Opera was recorded in 2011 27 A recording of the two act chamber opera The Soldier s Legacy of 1864 scored for four soloists piano and harmonium was issued in 2023 28 His oratorios brought him some popular and critical success The most enduringly successful of these St John the Baptist was first performed in 1873 at the Bristol Festival The Resurrection premiered in 1876 Joseph in 1877 and King David in 1883 18 Macfarren also wrote chamber music most notably the six string quartets that span over 40 years from 1834 29 Other chamber works include a piano trio in E minor a piano quintet in G minor sonatas for flute and violin and three piano sonatas 30 Macfarren also composed for the concertina His composition Romance and Allegro agitato for concertina violin viola cello and double bass was first performed by Richard Blagrove in 1854 31 Other compositions for concertina include the Barcarole 1856 and Violetta A Romance 1859 both for concertina and piano 32 Macfarren also wrote an arrangement for the concertina and seven other instruments of the second movement from Mendelssohn s Italian symphony 33 Compositions selective list editOrchestral edit 1828 Symphony No 1 in C fp Royal Academy of Music London September 1830 1831 Symphony No 2 in D minor fp Royal Academy of Music London December 1831 1832 Symphony No 3 in E minor 1832 Overture in E flat fp Royal Academy of Music London 26 June 1833 1833 Symphony No 4 in F minor fp Society of British Musicians London 27 October 1834 1833 Symphony No 5 in A minor 1834 The Merchant of Venice overture fp Society of British Musicians London October 1835 1835 Piano Concerto in C minor fp Society of British Musicians London 2 November 1835 1835 Concerto for Two Pianos in C major jointly as a student with William Sterndale Bennett 1836 Symphony No 6 in B flat 1836 Romeo and Juliet overture 1836 Concertino in A for cello and orchestra 1836 Chevy Chace overture fp Society of British Musicians London 7 January 1838 1839 40 Symphony No 7 in C sharp minor fp Philharmonic Society London 9 June 1845 1842 Don Carlos overture 1845 Symphony No 8 in D 1856 Hamlet overture fp New Philharmonic Society London 23 April 1856 1863 Flute Concerto in G fp Hanover Square Rooms London 24 February 1864 1873 Violin Concerto in G minor fp Philharmonic Society London 12 May 1873 1874 Symphony No 9 in E minor fp British Orchestral Society London 26 March 1874 1874 Festival Overture fp Liverpool Festival 1874 1875 Idyll in Memory of Sterndale Bennett fp Philharmonic Society London 5 July 1875 Choral and vocal edit 1853 Lenora cantata fp Exeter Hall London 25 April 1853 1856 May Day cantata fp Bradford Festival 28 August 1856 1860 Christmas cantata fp Musical Society of London 9 May 1860 1867 Two Songs with clarinet obbligato A Widow Bird Shelley Pack Clouds Away T Heywood 34 1868 Songs in a Cornfield cantata fp London 1868 1872 Outward Bound cantata fp Norwich Festival 1872 1873 St John the Baptist oratorio fp Bristol Festival 23 October 1873 1876 The Resurrection oratorio fp Birmingham Festival 30 August 1876 1876 The Lady of the Lake cantata fp Glasgow Choral Union 15 November 1877 1877 Joseph oratorio fp Leeds Festival 21 September 1877 1883 King David oratorio fp Leeds Festival 12 October 1883 1884 St George s Te Deum fp Crystal Palace London 23 April 1884 1887 Around the Hearth cantata fp Royal Academy of Music London 1887 Operatic edit 1831 Mrs G farce fp Queen s Theatre London 1831 1832 Genevieve or The Maid of Switzerland operetta fp Queen s Theatre London 1832 1833 The Prince of Modena opera unperformed 1834 Caractacus opera unperformed 1835 Old Oak Tree farce fp Lyceum Theatre London 1835 I and My Double farce fp Lyceum Theatre London 16 June 1835 1836 If the Cap Fit Ye Wear It farce 1836 Innocent Sins or Peccadilloes operetta fp Coburg Theatre London August 1836 1837 38 El Malhechor opera unperformed 1838 The Devil s Opera opera fp Lyceum Theatre London 13 August 1838 1839 Love Among the Roses romance 1839 Agnes Bernauer the Maid of Augsburg romance fp Covent Garden Theatre London 20 April 1839 1840 An Emblematic Tribute on the Queen s Marriage masque fp Drury Lane Theatre London 10 February 1840 1840 41 An Adventure of Don Quixote opera fp Drury Lane Theatre London 3 February 1846 1847 48 King Charles II opera fp Princess s Theatre London 27 October 1849 c 1850 Allan of Aberfeldy opera unperformed 1850 The Sleeper Awakened serenata fp Her Majesty s Theatre London 15 November 1850 1860 Robin Hood simple opera fp Her Majesty s Theatre London 11 October 1860 1863 Freya s Gift allegorical masque fp Covent Garden Theatre London 10 March 1863 1863 Jessie Lea opera di camera fp Gallery of Illustration London 2 November 1863 1863 64 She Stoops to Conquer opera fp Covent Garden Theatre London 11 February 1864 1864 The Soldier s Legacy opera di camera fp Gallery of Illustration London 10 July 1864 1864 Helvellyn opera fp Covent Garden Theatre London 3 November 1864 1880 Kenilworth opera unperformed Chamber music edit 1834 String Quartet No 1 in G minor 1840 String Quartet No 2 in F major Op 54 published Leipzig 1846 35 1842 String Quartet No 3 in A major 1843 4 Piano Quintet in G minor 1852 String Quartet in G minor 1857 Violin Sonata in E minor 1864 Fantasia Traditions of Shakespeare variations for clarinet and piano 34 1872 Religious March in E flat major 36 1878 String Quartet in G major 1880 Piano Trio in A minor for flute cello and piano 1883 Flute Sonata Piano edit 1842 Piano Sonata No 1 in E flat major revised 1887 1845 Piano Sonata No 2 in A Ma cousine 1880 Piano Sonata No 3 in G Incidental music edit 1882 Ajax fp Cambridge University November 1882 Reputation editDuring his lifetime Macfarren s music met with a mixed reception his views were often considered dogmatic and reactionary but unlike Grove his theoretical and analytical expertise was indisputable 37 One contemporary called Macfarren essentially a musical grammarian engaged all his life long in settling the doctrine of the enclitic de 38 Those who thought highly of his work praised its originality and its tastefulness According to a contemporary commentator Macfarren had great originality of thought and as a composer would probably have had still greater success if his early composition studies had been formed on the more modern lines to which he afterwards became so devotedly attached 39 Salome s dance in St John the Baptist was praised for its avoidance of the salacious The whole of the scene is very cleverly worked out and the composer has avoided anything inappropriate in the music descriptive of the dance that might be considered out of place in an oratorio 39 Others however criticized the oratorio arguing that with all its very great and solid merit can be said to be original in style only in virtue of the logical results of certain theories of harmony held by its composer 40 By the early twentieth century Macfarren s works were no longer performed a fact which the Worshipful Company of Musicians attributed to a lack of genius on Macfarren s part Never was more earnest composer more prolific writer never did man strive more zealously for the art of his country yet Heaven had endowed him only with talent and not genius 41 Modern commentators generally consider Macfarren to be the most eminent representative of conservatism in orchestration 42 His Ajax has been called professionally composed if uninspiring 43 and his writing for trumpet singled out as conventional although he does make liberal use of the out of tune harmonics especially b flat he rarely uses notes outside the harmonic series and rarely writes the first trumpet part above the first treble staff 44 Macfarren s music is capable of graceful lyricism but what may be a desire to avoid cliches in the songs leads him at times to an unexpected angularity of line that seems more awkward than fresh 45 However Macfarren s St John the Baptist has been praised as an original and imaginative piece in which the shadow of Mendelssohn so prominent since the appearance of Elijah in 1846 is only occasionally perceptible 18 Notes edit Banister 1891 p 2 The Musical Times Vol 39 1 January 1898 New York and London a b c d e f g h i j Brown 2004 a b Banister 1891 p 10 Banister 1891 p 13 a b Smither 2000 p 339 a b Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Macfarren Sir George Alexander Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Smither 2000 p 350 Degott 2007 pp 225 226 Solie 2004 p 39 Ellsworth 2007 p 150 Scholes 1970 p 310 Macfarren Walter 1905 p 207 Foreman 2005 117 Banister 1887 1888 p 69 Banister 1891 p 31 Caswell 1938 p 66 a b c d e f Smither 2000 p 340 Banister 1887 1888 70 Macfarren George Alexander MFRN875GA A Cambridge Alumni Database University of Cambridge Permalink for Beethoven score and analysis at New York Public Library Archived from the original on 6 July 2013 Retrieved 10 January 2007 Larry Todd R 23 October 2003 Mendelssohn Oxford University Press USA ISBN 9780195110432 Banister 1891 p 41 Wagner Richard My Life Volume 2 p 630 his fourth and seventh by the Queensland Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Werner Andreas Albert It is possible that the fourth symphony is the F minor symphony that was played in 1834 by the Society of British Musicians Banister Henry Charles 6 February 1888 The Life and Work of Sir G A MacFarren Proceedings of the Musical Association 1887 1888 Oxford University Press 67 88 JSTOR 765395 Temperley Nicholas Macfarren Sir George Alexander Grove Music Online subscription req d Robin Hood Naxos CD 8 660306 07 2011 The Soldier s Legacy Retrospect Opera RO009 reviewed at MusicWeb International Unsung Composers Brown 2004 Mr Richard Blagrove s Annual Concert The Musical World 32 22 376 3 June 1854 Atlas Allan W 1996 The Wheatstone English concertina in Victorian England Oxford Clarendon Press pp 23 41 ISBN 978 0198165804 The Concertina Belfast Telegraph 27 June 1877 p 4 a b Recorded by Colin Bradbury and Oliver Davies on The Victorian Clarinet Tradition Clarinet Classics CC0022 1997 IMSLP complete set of parts and realisation by Steve s Bedroom Band Review The Organist s Quarterly Journal by Wm Spark The Musical Times and Singing Class Circular 15 352 508 1 June 1872 Dale 2003 62 Hadow 1894 29 a b Barnett 1906 179 Statham 1875 300 Worshipful Company of Musicians 1906 283 Brownlow 1996 140 Dibble 2002 136 Brownlow 1996 105 Smither 2000 353 References editBanister Henry Charles George Alexander Macfarren His Life Works and Influence London G Bell and Sons 1891 OCLC 1720974 The Life and Work of Sir G A Macfarren Proceedings of the Musical Association 7th session 1880 1881 67 88 Barnett John Francis Musical Reminiscences and Impressions London Hodder and Staughton 1906 Brown Clive Macfarren Sir George Alexander 1813 1887 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press 2004 Accessed 17 May 2009 Brownlow James Arthur The last trumpet a history of the English slide trumpet New York Pendragon Press 1996 ISBN 0 945193 81 5 Caswell Mina Holway Ministry of Music The Life of William Rogers Chapman 1938 Reprint Montana Kessinger Publishing 2006 ISBN 1 4286 6089 5 Dale Catherine Music Analysis in Britain in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries Aldershot Hants England Ashgate 2003 ISBN 1 84014 273 1 Degott Pierre 2007 Dow Gillian E ed Translators Interpreters Mediators Women Writers 1700 1900 Bern Switzerland Peter Lang pp 225 236 ISBN 978 3 03911 055 1 Dibble Jeremy Charles Villiers Stanford man and musician Oxford Oxford University Press 2002 ISBN 0 19 816383 5 Ellsworth Therese 2007 Ellsworth Therese Wollenberg Susan eds The Piano in Nineteenth Century British Culture Instruments Performers and Repertoire Aldershot Hampshire Ashgate ISBN 978 0 7546 6143 6 Foreman Susan London A musical gazetteer New Haven Yale University Press 2005 ISBN 0 300 10402 2 Hadow W H Studies in Modern Music Frederick Chopin Antonin Dvorak Johannes Brahms 1894 Reprint Montana Kessinger Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 7661 8263 0 Legge Robin Humphrey 1893 Macfarren George Alexander In Lee Sidney ed Dictionary of National Biography Vol 35 London Smith Elder amp Co Macfarren Walter Cecil Memories An autobiography The Walter Scott Publishing Company Ltd 1905 Macfarren s Chevy Chase Overture The Musical Times 1 August 1911 page 527 Poston Lawrence Spring 2005 Henry Wood the Proms and National Identity in Music 1895 1904 Victorian Studies 47 3 397 426 doi 10 1353 vic 2005 0104 S2CID 144254258 Miller George July August 1999 Macfarren Symphonies No 4 No 7 Werner Andreas Albert cond Queensland PO cpo 999 433 58 40 Fanfare 22 6 Scholes Percy Alfred 1970 The Mirror of Music 1844 1944 A Century of Musical Life in Britain as Reflected in the Pages of the Musical Times Freeport New York Books for Libraries Press ISBN 0 8369 5443 2 Shrock Dennis Choral Repertoire Oxford Oxford University Press 2009 ISBN 0 19 532778 0 Smither Howard E A History of the Oratorio The oratorio in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2000 ISBN 0 8078 2511 5 Solie Ruth A 2004 Music in Other Words Victorian Conversations Berkeley University of California Press ISBN 0 520 23845 1 Statham H Heathcote March 1875 The Place of Sterndale Bennett in Music Fraser s Magazine 299 305 Temperley Nicholas Music in Britain The Romantic Age 1800 1914 The Athlone History of Music in Britain Vol 5 London The Athlone Press 1981 Weber William Winter 2008 Canonicity and Collegiality Other Composers 1790 1850 Common Knowledge 14 1 105 123 doi 10 1215 0961754X 2007 034 S2CID 143131494 Worshipful Company of Musicians English music 1604 to 1904 being the lectures given at the Music Loan Exhibition of the Worshipful Company of Musicians held at Fishmongers Hall London Bridge June July 1904 The Walter Scott Publishing Company Ltd 1906 External links editFree scores by George Alexander Macfarren in the Choral Public Domain Library ChoralWiki Free scores by George Alexander Macfarren at the International Music Score Library Project IMSLP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George Alexander Macfarren amp oldid 1218347533, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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